She did her time on ‘The Rock’
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Costa Mesa’s Joan Ellis spent a year living at Alcatraz. Don’t worry;
she was a voluntary resident of “The Rock.”
Ellis’ first husband, Fred Brisbois, served as a prison guard at
the island penitentiary for a year.
The couple bounced across the country during their early years
together, also making stops in Las Vegas, Miami and Salinas before
heading down to Los Angeles and later, Claremont.
After the end of her first marriage, Ellis found her way to Costa
Mesa.
Ellis, 75, suffered a heart attack and a broken shoulder in 2000
and credited exercise classes offered by the Costa Mesa Senior Center
with aiding her recovery.
A fan of the theater, Ellis has designed costumes for the Theatre
District, a Hollywood theater that formerly called Costa Mesa home.
She enjoys what she calls the real-life theater of the senior
center, where she has found friends and romance with her beau,
Richard Gonzales.
She took time to tell her stories to the Daily Pilot’s Andrew
Edwards.
What was it like living on Alcatraz?
That was a very interesting experience. I think they finally
closed it in 1960-something, but we’d been gone for some years by
then.
But when we lived on Alcatraz, I worked part-time in the city of
San Francisco for an insurance company, so the only way to get to the
mainland was by launch. And in the morning, all the kids, we had, I
don’t know how many families, 60, 70 families lived on the island and
maybe 150, 200 kids of all ages, and that’s how we would get to town,
was by the launch.
And if you missed the last launch back to the island by midnight,
then you got to stay overnight someplace in the city because there
wasn’t another one until morning.
Actually, I never saw an inmate. Well, maybe just a few, we did
come down to get on the launch and they would blow a whistle and all
of the inmates would have to get to the end of the dock.
And that was kind of eerie because you would come along Building
63, come along on this wooden walkway and down stairs, they’d just be
watching as you come down and that was a little disconcerting.
The ratio, I think, was two inmates to one guard, so we really
didn’t see them. We had one riot while we were there.
My husband at that time, he graduated from Boston College and he
was a social science major, and he just thought it would be a lark to
go out and see what it would be like to be a correctional officer on
Alcatraz Island.
What was there to do in Vegas?
There wasn’t anything and I couldn’t even drink, I wasn’t old
enough.
After we nearly starved after four months because there was
absolutely no work to be done, Fred worked for a short time as a
shill at the Golden Nugget.
Because they don’t want tables to look empty, he’d be sitting at a
blackjack table or whatever, and one time we were down to our last
dollar, so we got two dollars by throwing it on the red on the
roulette wheel, and then we bought a dog.
We were just kids. Well, he was older than I; he was back from the
service.
What kind of costume work did you do with the theater district?
Here’s something interesting I learned in working with costumes.
You don’t just pick out a costume you think that looks pretty on
whoever the performer is.
The costume itself has to move the story forward, it has to have
some meaning to what the person is portraying.
It’s like a visual cue as to what you should interpret from this
character.
Any favorite plays?
We did “Dracula” one year for Halloween, and that was the most
fun, because you can just really be outrageous.
What is it that drives you to the theater?
Color, costumes, expression. Whether it’s comedy or drama, I lose
myself totally in the theater, lose myself. I love performing arts, I
go when I can.
It’s just a world of imagination, I love theater. If I had a
little more guts, I’d be out there performing.
There’s some elements of theater right here in this center, you
see a different drama everyday, if you keep your eyes open.
People meet, they fall in love, they have a fight, they divorce --
not divorce, but you know what I mean.
I’ve had friends that I made, I have a circle of friends that
sustained me through some tough times.
I’ve made all these friendships here with women. So it’s women
here, activities supporting each other. I’ve got to give a plug for
my center.
This is just, really is, it’s a wonderful place to come make
friends, and be entertained, be educated, be informed.
You feel like you’re still contributing something.
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